It's just a descriptor they have chosen to decribe the wine and to evoke the experience of drinking it. What's the problem with that? In this particular case, the baseline for Syrah is the French versions, and so it seems only natural that one would use those sorts of descriptors. Unless you think wine descriptors should be controlled by the AOC or other appellation authority.

"The sun, with all those planets revolving about it and dependent on it, can still ripen a bunch of grapes as if it had nothing else to do"Galileo Galilei

(avatar: me next to the WIYN 3.5 meter telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory)

Garrique is not a single plant, though, right, it's a collection of low-growing plants and dirt indigenous to the coastal areas of southern France that could include such things as rosemary, sage and thyme? As someone who grew up in a hilly area of Southern California next to miles of undeveloped land, I can attest to there being a very similar collection of herbal aromas on warm summer days. I noted the similarity the first time I visited Provence.

My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov

What the others said. If we want to snob on them, let's do it over dropping the "s" from "garrigues," but as others have said, rosemary and thyme are international, and it's not really wrong to use metaphors from the regions that gave us Syrah. Spelling it wrong, though, is like substituting Gallo "Sauterne" for the Chateau d'Yquem in your glass.

Robin Garr wrote:What the others said. If we want to snob on them, let's do it over dropping the "s" from "garrigues," but as others have said, rosemary and thyme are international, and it's not really wrong to use metaphors from the regions that gave us Syrah. Spelling it wrong, though, is like substituting Gallo "Sauterne" for the Chateau d'Yquem in your glass.

Actually, Robin, it is correct without the 'S'. It isn't the plural of one garrigue, it means as Jenise implied, the Mediterranean scrubland. It isn't referring to a type of plant in the plural, it is referring to a type of area/terrain. When we say that we can smell garrigue in wine it is the equivalent of saying that you can smell the forest in your deodorant spray.

It therefor refers to a specific area, not specific plants, although to be generous I suppose one could accept Jenise's description of them meaning that the smells were of the type they thought might be found in that area of France (as I doubt many had personally experienced it).

I suppose one should get more exercised over the other florid bombastic adjectives used by reviewers such as RP.

Or I may just take Davi'd suggestion and pop a cork and forget about language niceties in the barbaric world of wine criticism. As it happens I have a Californian Syrah sitting to chambrée - I'll try to remember to liken it to garrigue in a note.....

It looks like Garrigue refers specifically to calcareous (limestone, base-rich) soils, and in acid soils the term is Maquis. In California there is Chaparral, with similar connotations as regards resinous, aromatics scrub. In parts of California, mainly Central Coas,t there is also limestone; in much of CA the soils are acid, including much terrain of volcanic origin. Plenty of room for confusion, and easy generalization leading to more confusion.

Steve Edmunds wrote:It looks like Garrigue refers specifically to calcareous (limestone, base-rich) soils, and in acid soils the term is Maquis. In California there is Chaparral, with similar connotations as regards resinous, aromatics scrub. In parts of California, mainly Central Coast there is also limestone; in much of it the soils are acid, including much terrain of volcanic origin. Plenty of room for confusion, and easy generalization leading to more confusion.

I think that more likely at the root of this is that in the US there is some confusion over the meaning of garrigue, and some have taken it to mean the meaty, gamey aromas of low-level Brett infections so common in the S. Rhone. I have read many people's descriptions of wines I know that include the garrigue descriptor, and most often what I can get from them is what I described above. I think that if more people who used that term had driven through the wilds of Provence in the heat of summer, there'd be a lot less confusion over the term. Steve's relating it to the chapparal of N. and Central CA is also very apt, with lots of rosemary and sage present in both.

Tasting notes of southern french red wines often include the intriguing descriptor 'garrigue'. So, what is it exactly? Garrigue is the name given to the Mediterranean scrubland which is made up of low growing, bushy plants including holm oak, juniper, broom and wild herbs such as rosemary and thyme. In Provence it also includes lavender although I have never seen this in the wild in the Languedoc.

Walking amongst the garrigue on a warm day, crushing herbs underfoot, releases a fabulous aroma of warm thyme and rosemary. When used to describe a wine, garrigue refers to these green herby aromas. It can also be used to describe flavours too although I find it more evocative as a descriptor for aroma

Good point about the animal bretty smells - this is not what is meant by garrigue, but many seem to think it is. Once you've been there and walked over the ground you'll never be unsure again.